sntp man page on Hurd

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SNTP(1)			      Programmer's Manual		       SNTP(1)

NAME
       sntp - standard Simple Network Time Protocol program

SYNOPSIS
       sntp [-flag [value]]... [--opt-name [[=| ]value]]...
	       [ hostname-or-IP ...]

DESCRIPTION
       This  manual page briefly documents the sntp command.  sntp can be used
       as a SNTP client to query a NTP or SNTP server and either  display  the
       time or set the local system's time (given suitable privilege).	It can
       be run as an interactive command or in a cron job.

       NTP (the Network Time Protocol) and SNTP (the Simple Network Time  Pro‐
       tocol) are defined and described by RFC 5905.

       The default is to write the estimated correct local date and time (i.e.
       not  UTC)  to  the  standard  output  in	 a  format  like   '1996-10-15
       20:17:25.123  (+0800) +4.567 +/- 0.089 secs', where the '(+0800)' means
       that to get to UTC from the reported local time one must	 add  8	 hours
       and  0  minutes,	 and  the  '+4.567 +/- 0.089 secs' indicates the local
       clock is 4.567 seconds behind the correct time (so 4.567	 seconds  must
       be  added  to the local clock to get it to be correct), and the time of
       '1996-10-15 20:17:25.123' is believed to be correct to within +/- 0.089
       seconds.

OPTIONS
       -4, --ipv4
	      Force  IPv4 DNS name resolution.	This option must not appear in
	      combination with any of the following options: ipv6.

	      Force DNS resolution of the following host names on the  command
	      line to the IPv4 namespace.

       -6, --ipv6
	      Force  IPv6 DNS name resolution.	This option must not appear in
	      combination with any of the following options: ipv4.

	      Force DNS resolution of the following host names on the  command
	      line to the IPv6 namespace.

       -d, --normalverbose
	      Normal verbose.

	      Diagnostic messages for non-fatal errors and a limited amount of
	      tracing should be written to standard error.  Fatal ones	always
	      produce a diagnostic.  This option should be set when there is a
	      suspected problem with the server, network or the source.

       -K file-name, --kod=file-name
	      KoD history filename.

	      Specifies the filename to be used to persist the history of  KoD
	      responses	 received  from	 servers.  The default is /var/db/ntp-
	      kod.

       -p, --syslog
	      Logging with syslog.  This option must not appear in combination
	      with any of the following options: logfile.

	      When this option is set all logging will be done using syslog.

       -l file-name, --logfile=file-name
	      Log to specified logfile.	 This option must not appear in combi‐
	      nation with any of the following options: syslog.

	      This option causes the client to write log messages to the spec‐
	      ified logfile.

       -s, --settod
	      Set  (step)  the time with settimeofday().  This option must not
	      appear in combination with any of the  following	options:  adj‐
	      time.

       -j, --adjtime
	      Set (slew) the time with adjtime().  This option must not appear
	      in combination with any of the following options: settod.

       -b broadcast-address, --broadcast=broadcast-address
	      Use broadcasts to the address specified for synchronisation.

	      If specified SNTP will listen to the specified broadcast address
	      for  NTP broadcasts.  The default maximum wait time, 68 seconds,
	      can be modified with -t.

       -t seconds, --timeout=seconds
	      Specify the number of seconds  to	 wait  for  broadcasts.	  This
	      option  takes  an	 integer  number as its argument.  The default
	      seconds for this option is:
		   68

	      When waiting for a broadcast packet SNTP will wait the number of
	      seconds specified before giving up.  Default 68 seconds.

       -a auth-keynumber, --authentication=auth-keynumber
	      Enable  authentication with the key auth-keynumber.  This option
	      takes an integer number as its argument.

	      This option enables authentication using the  key	 specified  in
	      this  option's  argument.	  The  argument	 of this option is the
	      keyid, a number specified in the keyfile as this	key's  identi‐
	      fier. See the keyfile option (-k) for more details.

       -k file-name, --keyfile=file-name
	      Specify a keyfile. SNTP will look in this file for the key spec‐
	      ified with -a.

	      This option specifies the keyfile. SNTP will search for the  key
	      specified	 with -a keyno in this file. Key files follow the fol‐
	      lowing format:

	      keyid keytype key

	      Where	keyid is a number identifying this key keytype is  one
	      of  the follow: S	 Key in 64 Bit hexadecimal number as specified
	      in in the DES specification.  N  Key in 64 Bit hexadecimal  num‐
	      ber  as specified in the NTP standard.  A	 Key in a 1-to-8 char‐
	      acter ASCII string.  M  Key in a 1-to-8 character	 ASCII	string
	      using the MD5 authentication scheme.

	      For more information see ntp.keys(5).

       -?, --help
	      Display extended usage information and exit.

       -!, --more-help
	      Extended usage information passed thru pager.

       -> [rcfile], --save-opts[=rcfile]
	      Save  the	 option state to rcfile.  The default is the last con‐
	      figuration file listed in the OPTION PRESETS section, below.

       -< rcfile, --load-opts=rcfile, --no-load-opts
	      Load options from rcfile.	 The no-load-opts  form	 will  disable
	      the  loading of earlier RC/INI files.  --no-load-opts is handled
	      early, out of order.

       - [{v|c|n}], --version[={v|c|n}]
	      Output version of program and exit.  The default mode is `v',  a
	      simple  version.	 The `c' mode will print copyright information
	      and `n' will print the full copyright notice.

OPTION PRESETS
       Any option that is not marked as not presettable may be preset by load‐
       ing  values from configuration ("RC" or ".INI") file(s) and values from
       environment variables named:
	 SNTP_<option-name> or SNTP
       The environmental presets take precedence (are  processed  later	 than)
       the  configuration  files.   The homerc files are "$HOME", and ".".  If
       any of these are directories, then the  file  .ntprc  is	 searched  for
       within those directories.

USAGE
       The simplest use of this program is as an unprivileged command to check
       the current time and error in the local clock.  For example:

	      sntp ntpserver.somewhere

       With suitable privilege, it can be run as a command or in a cron job to
       reset  the  local  clock	 from  a reliable server, like the ntpdate and
       rdate commands.	For example:

	      sntp -a ntpserver.somewhere

RETURN VALUE
       The program returns a zero exit status for success, and a non-zero  one
       otherwise.

BUGS
       Please report bugs to http://bugs.ntp.org .

AUTHOR
       David L. Mills and/or others
       Please send bug reports to:  http://bugs.ntp.org, bugs@ntp.org

       see html/copyright.html

       This manual page was AutoGen-erated from the sntp option definitions.

( 4.2.6p5)			  2011-12-24			       SNTP(1)
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